If you could build a ladder tall enough

If you could build a ladder tall enough

Author
Discussion

tuffer

Original Poster:

8,850 posts

268 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
Could you just climb into space? I know there is some ludicrous speed that rockets need to reach to escape the earths atmosphere but could you theoretically just climb through it on a very tall ladder?

LordJammy

3,112 posts

190 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
Don't see why not. Probably need a space suit and a stop off for a fag on the way though.

Funkycoldribena

7,379 posts

155 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
No,because there's no window sills in space.

ApOrbital

9,971 posts

119 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
I would climb into someones ego on here and get inside their head as it looks big enough plenty of space.

QuartzDad

2,268 posts

123 months

anonymous-user

55 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
Nanotubes please!

funkyrobot

18,789 posts

229 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
Imagine if you got all the way to the top and needed a st!

funkyrobot

18,789 posts

229 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
Funkycoldribena said:
No,because there's no window sills in space.
The ISS must have some.

thebraketester

14,266 posts

139 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
tuffer said:
Could you just climb into space? I know there is some ludicrous speed that rockets need to reach to escape the earths atmosphere but could you theoretically just climb through it on a very tall ladder?
Ignoring the fact the the ladders wouldn't be able to support their own weight. But providing that you could build them then why not?

RobDickinson

31,343 posts

255 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
As you climb a ladder you would get free energy from the earth something rockets don't get

briangriffin

1,589 posts

169 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
There's a website for these sorts of questions. Believe the bloke used to work for NASA. Not sure if your question has already been addressed but it's worth asking if it hasn't.

http://what-if.xkcd.com/archive/

DragsterRR

367 posts

108 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
Be better if you sited the base of the ladder in australia though.
Then you would only have to climb down. Be much easier.

98elise

26,719 posts

162 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
tuffer said:
Could you just climb into space? I know there is some ludicrous speed that rockets need to reach to escape the earths atmosphere but could you theoretically just climb through it on a very tall ladder?
Just to be pedantic, you don't actually need great speed to reach space. If you were to leave the ground at 1 mph and not stop you would reach space in a little over 60 hours.

Funkycoldribena

7,379 posts

155 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
98elise said:
Just to be pedantic, you don't actually need great speed to reach space. If you were to leave the ground at 1 mph and not stop you would reach space in a little over 60 hours.
But where would you sleep?

northwest monkey

6,370 posts

190 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
98elise said:
tuffer said:
Could you just climb into space? I know there is some ludicrous speed that rockets need to reach to escape the earths atmosphere but could you theoretically just climb through it on a very tall ladder?
Just to be pedantic, you don't actually need great speed to reach space. If you were to leave the ground at 1 mph and not stop you would reach space in a little over 60 hours.
Genuine question - why use rockets then & not planes?

Pvapour

8,981 posts

254 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
Funkycoldribena said:
98elise said:
Just to be pedantic, you don't actually need great speed to reach space. If you were to leave the ground at 1 mph and not stop you would reach space in a little over 60 hours.
But where would you sleep?
Get the lunar cycle right and you could sleep in the crescent of the moon, maybe a bit of fishing for tea? You'd be a bit hungary after that kind of climb

GroundEffect

13,851 posts

157 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
No material exists right now strong enough for the task; to 'officially' be in space you need to get to 100km - the Karman Line - and the centrifugal forces on the ladder would cause it to fail no matter what you made it out of.

Carbon nano-tubes appear to have the tensile strength required but they aren't exactly industrialised yet smile


Andy RV

304 posts

131 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
northwest monkey said:
98elise said:
tuffer said:
Could you just climb into space? I know there is some ludicrous speed that rockets need to reach to escape the earths atmosphere but could you theoretically just climb through it on a very tall ladder?
Just to be pedantic, you don't actually need great speed to reach space. If you were to leave the ground at 1 mph and not stop you would reach space in a little over 60 hours.
Genuine question - why use rockets then & not planes?
Because the vast majority of aeroplane engines need air to operate.

CorbynForTheBin

12,231 posts

195 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
Is the ladder on a conveyor belt?

GroundEffect

13,851 posts

157 months

Saturday 5th December 2015
quotequote all
Andy RV said:
northwest monkey said:
98elise said:
tuffer said:
Could you just climb into space? I know there is some ludicrous speed that rockets need to reach to escape the earths atmosphere but could you theoretically just climb through it on a very tall ladder?
Just to be pedantic, you don't actually need great speed to reach space. If you were to leave the ground at 1 mph and not stop you would reach space in a little over 60 hours.
Genuine question - why use rockets then & not planes?
Because the vast majority of aeroplane engines need air to operate.
Escape Velocity (i.e. the speed an object needs from the surface to be able to 'break' clear of any orbit) is only relevant for ballastic objects such as bullets and shells. Any object that can provide constant thrust to move vertically could fly in to space...as long as it didn't need air smile